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Minnesota Native News
Trailer
Bonus
Episode 74
Season 1
BIA Team from MN Fights Wildfires
Marie: This is Minnesota Native News, I’m Marie Rock. Coming up...
Come January, there will be new leadership in the White House with a plan for Tribal Nation relationship...
and Minnesota tribes band together to assist in fighting wildfires out West.
Reporter Leah Lemm has these stories….
STORY #1: PE BIDEN-VPE HARRIS ON TRIBAL NATIONS
President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris are poised to lead the nation next. During his victory speech, President Elect Biden acknowledged the diversity of supporters that helped elect him.
Pres-Elect Biden: “...I am proud of the coalition we put together, the broadest and most diverse in history. Democrats, Republicans and independents. Progressives, moderates and conservatives. Young and old. Urban, suburban and rural. Gay, straight, transgender. White. Latino. Asian. Native American.”
In early October, their campaign released their plan for tribal nations.
They write that they plan to uphold the U.S.’s trust responsibility, strengthen the Nation-to-Nation relationship between Tribal Nations and the United States, and work to empower tribal sovereignty.
The next administration has many concrete items on the to-do list. A few of which are to:
appoint Native leaders to high level government positions,
defend the Indian Child Welfare Act, and...
Invest in Infrastructure and Clean Energy, including reliable high speed internet for Native households and support tribal efforts to shift to clean energy.
The full list can be found in the BIDEN-HARRIS PLAN FOR TRIBAL NATIONS.
Next up, tribes from Minnesota help fight wildfires out West.
STORY #2: BIA FIREFIGHTING CREW
Reporter: This summer and into fall, wildfires have spread in large parts of the country. Crews were sent to help control the fires, including a crew from tribal communities in MN. They fought the Puzzle fire in South Dakota and the Williams Fork and East Troublesome fires in Colorado.
Ferin Davis: We all represented the BIA, but we're pretty much employees of different tribal nations in Minnesota.
Reporter: Ferin Davis is a citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band and is the Lead Environmental Scientist for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community. They manage approximately 4,500 acres in Scott County, Minnesota, which is just located 30 minutes Southwest of Minneapolis.
Ferin was part of the 13-member crew representing the Bureau of Indian Affairs from Minnesota that went and helped fight wildfires.
Ferin Davis: There were firefighters from Leech Lake, Fond du Lac, White Earth, Bois Forte and, I believe Mille Lacs and then us in Shakopee... This was kind of cool that the BIA was able to pull us all together and send out the first all BIA represented module since the nineties.
Reporter: Ferin points out that part of the relationship between SMSC and the Bureau of Indian Affairs is that their fire fighting crew assists with wildfires, and in turn, the BIA helps with prescribed burn operations in their community.
The first fire they were called to was in South Dakota on the Rosebud Reservation on October 3rd.
Ferin Davis: And so we were pulled there first because we're a BIA crew and BIA manages that land or helps manage that land. It was 150 acre of fire. When we got there, it was kind of cooling down, but what we did was help really kind of put it to bed.
Reporter: Then the crew went to Colorado on the 8th, first to the Williams Fork fire.
Ferin Davis: It was getting really windy in where we're at. There are a lot of dead trees, standing, dead trees. So their concern was that these trees can fall on us while we're working. So when conditions get to be that dangerous, sometimes they'll take a step back and say, okay, we're just gonna reset, take the morning off to rehab your tools, get other things organized. We were basically waiting in our trucks, rehabbing our tools and kind of re-positioning for other things.
And that's when the East Troublesome Creek fire started. So then that afternoon we were kind of pulled over to that fire because whatever available resources they had, they wanted to respond to that.
Reporter: I’m glad to say Ferin Davis reported that the MN BIA crew was safe.
Ferin Davis: That's always the end goal is to go home safe.
Reporter: For MN Native News, I’m Leah Lemm.
Come January, there will be new leadership in the White House with a plan for Tribal Nation relationship...
and Minnesota tribes band together to assist in fighting wildfires out West.
Reporter Leah Lemm has these stories….
STORY #1: PE BIDEN-VPE HARRIS ON TRIBAL NATIONS
President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris are poised to lead the nation next. During his victory speech, President Elect Biden acknowledged the diversity of supporters that helped elect him.
Pres-Elect Biden: “...I am proud of the coalition we put together, the broadest and most diverse in history. Democrats, Republicans and independents. Progressives, moderates and conservatives. Young and old. Urban, suburban and rural. Gay, straight, transgender. White. Latino. Asian. Native American.”
In early October, their campaign released their plan for tribal nations.
They write that they plan to uphold the U.S.’s trust responsibility, strengthen the Nation-to-Nation relationship between Tribal Nations and the United States, and work to empower tribal sovereignty.
The next administration has many concrete items on the to-do list. A few of which are to:
appoint Native leaders to high level government positions,
defend the Indian Child Welfare Act, and...
Invest in Infrastructure and Clean Energy, including reliable high speed internet for Native households and support tribal efforts to shift to clean energy.
The full list can be found in the BIDEN-HARRIS PLAN FOR TRIBAL NATIONS.
Next up, tribes from Minnesota help fight wildfires out West.
STORY #2: BIA FIREFIGHTING CREW
Reporter: This summer and into fall, wildfires have spread in large parts of the country. Crews were sent to help control the fires, including a crew from tribal communities in MN. They fought the Puzzle fire in South Dakota and the Williams Fork and East Troublesome fires in Colorado.
Ferin Davis: We all represented the BIA, but we're pretty much employees of different tribal nations in Minnesota.
Reporter: Ferin Davis is a citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band and is the Lead Environmental Scientist for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community. They manage approximately 4,500 acres in Scott County, Minnesota, which is just located 30 minutes Southwest of Minneapolis.
Ferin was part of the 13-member crew representing the Bureau of Indian Affairs from Minnesota that went and helped fight wildfires.
Ferin Davis: There were firefighters from Leech Lake, Fond du Lac, White Earth, Bois Forte and, I believe Mille Lacs and then us in Shakopee... This was kind of cool that the BIA was able to pull us all together and send out the first all BIA represented module since the nineties.
Reporter: Ferin points out that part of the relationship between SMSC and the Bureau of Indian Affairs is that their fire fighting crew assists with wildfires, and in turn, the BIA helps with prescribed burn operations in their community.
The first fire they were called to was in South Dakota on the Rosebud Reservation on October 3rd.
Ferin Davis: And so we were pulled there first because we're a BIA crew and BIA manages that land or helps manage that land. It was 150 acre of fire. When we got there, it was kind of cooling down, but what we did was help really kind of put it to bed.
Reporter: Then the crew went to Colorado on the 8th, first to the Williams Fork fire.
Ferin Davis: It was getting really windy in where we're at. There are a lot of dead trees, standing, dead trees. So their concern was that these trees can fall on us while we're working. So when conditions get to be that dangerous, sometimes they'll take a step back and say, okay, we're just gonna reset, take the morning off to rehab your tools, get other things organized. We were basically waiting in our trucks, rehabbing our tools and kind of re-positioning for other things.
And that's when the East Troublesome Creek fire started. So then that afternoon we were kind of pulled over to that fire because whatever available resources they had, they wanted to respond to that.
Reporter: I’m glad to say Ferin Davis reported that the MN BIA crew was safe.
Ferin Davis: That's always the end goal is to go home safe.
Reporter: For MN Native News, I’m Leah Lemm.